• Breaking News

    Thursday, August 16, 2018

    Functions may behave as if they had negative complexity on optimal evaluators Computer Science

    Functions may behave as if they had negative complexity on optimal evaluators Computer Science


    Functions may behave as if they had negative complexity on optimal evaluators

    Posted: 15 Aug 2018 02:12 PM PDT

    Reputable online sites that teach coding?

    Posted: 15 Aug 2018 05:20 PM PDT

    I'm pretty hesitant when looking up reviews for sites since many of them seem fishy or paid so I thought I'd ask here. What are some sites you guys can teach someone who is trying to get into coding? So far I liked the trial that code academy has since its user friendly to me, but I'd like your opinion on code academy or other sites that are good as well.

    submitted by /u/dudemanguymale
    [link] [comments]

    Electrical Engineer/math major trying to get into CS during Biomedical Engineering PhD (which courses?)

    Posted: 15 Aug 2018 02:12 PM PDT

    Hey guys!

    I'm trying to build my programming skills (I have background skills) and general computer understanding as I go into my PhD in Biomedical engineering. My thesis project is building a computational brain map, so it is mostly (80%) programming. I get to take a good number of grad-level CS courses.

    I am interested in software development and data science, but I mostly want to strengthen my understanding of computing/become a better coder so that I have the flexibility to choose what path I choose to go down later on.

    I am most interested in skills that allow me to secure a job that's remote work (think /r/digitalnomad lol)

    I really want to start working on independent projects, but I don't feel that my skills are good enough, and I honestly don't really know what I'm doing when I try. I don't even know what's possible because I only know a bit more coding than an average EE student.

    For some background, I did an undergraduate degree in math and a masters in Electrical engineering. Relevant undergrad CS courses I took were OOP (Java), Data structures & algorithms (java+ python), and scientific computing in C++ (grad level).

    I loved C++, and low level is a lot of fun for me (I think this is because of my EE/math background). Because of this, I feel like low level/systems is what I'd be best at. However, I love problem solving in any language (c++ is borderline masochistic compared to python).

    My question is: I have a couple graduate courses I can take next fall, and Im wondering what is going to help me achieve my goals and make me a better programmer.

    My graduate course choices: Operating Systems, Computer Networks, Databases, Systems programming (undergrad level), OOP in C++, Data Visualization, Graphics

    More Engineering/hardware type courses are: Parallel Programming Techniques, computer architecture for AI.

    I can do an ML/data mining class in R, but I'm not too keen on this language, lol. I also have an ML/robotics type class in C++/Python that sounds interesting.

    I know OS is hard, and I am not sure if I can do it without a ton of systems knowledge, but it would be really fucking cool to learn how a computer works at that level.

    I am also really interested in networks, but I'm not sure what learning to build my own server can do for me? However, learning how the internet works would be very very cool as well.

    What do you guys think? I really appreciate any opinions. Thank you so much.

    submitted by /u/donutboi
    [link] [comments]

    I am in freshman year of college, what internships can I do?

    Posted: 15 Aug 2018 03:52 PM PDT

    My semester starts on the 27th and I was wondering if I should intern somewhere. However, it seems like most internships want people with Python or Go skills.

    submitted by /u/epicboyxp
    [link] [comments]

    No comments:

    Post a Comment